Niger’s president wins the Ibrahim African leadership prize
Mahamadou Issoufou is bowing out after two terms, but leaves a troubling legacy
FEW PRIZES are as prestigious, or as seldom awarded. In 2006 Mo Ibrahim, a Sudan-born British telecoms billionaire, endowed an annual prize for good governance in Africa. It goes to a head of government who has run a sub-Saharan country well—and has left office gracefully when it is time to go. The winner receives $5m.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “A gift seldom given”
Middle East & Africa March 13th 2021
- Why some ships vanish before unloading in the Middle East
- Ten years of war have broken Syria into pieces
- The arrest of an opposition leader sparks protests in Senegal
- Niger’s president wins the Ibrahim African leadership prize
- A power grab by Somalia’s president has tipped it into crisis
- Remote working is a lifeline for Kenya’s beach resorts
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